A Juxtaposition of rational choice and socio-cultural approaches to explain changes in family size throughout the process of economic development using household survey data from Brazil

dc.contributor.author

Delfino, Daniel

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2010-06-24T21:53:55Z

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2010-06-24T21:53:55Z

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2010-06-24T21:53:55Z

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May 2010

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http://hdl.handle.net/1928/10810

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This research juxtaposes empirical approaches to analyze the relationship between fertility and economic development. Using household survey data from Brazil in the mid 1990’s, separate Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) models are run that comparatively evaluate the explanatory power of divergent methods used to explain fertility in developing countries. Rational choice approaches, in the spirit of Gary S. Becker, are presented alongside approaches that account for heterogeneous socio-cultural traits to see which method explains more about family size in Brazil. The paper finds evidence to support the relevance of both the rational choice and the socio-cultural approaches to fertility studies. The research ultimately presents evidence that socio-cultural models generate relatively more explanatory power in the fertility analysis of Brazil than methods adopting the strict axioms of rational choice models from the Becker-era.

en_US

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en_US

en_US

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Fertility

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Development

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Culture

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Becker

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Heterodox

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Survey

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dc.subject.lcsh

Fertility, Human--Brazil

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Fertility, Human--Developing countries

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Economic development--Social aspects--Brazil

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Economic development--Social aspects--Developing countries

dc.title

A Juxtaposition of rational choice and socio-cultural approaches to explain changes in family size throughout the process of economic development using household survey data from Brazil